The Korea Times

NK launches missiles to test Seoul-Washington deterrence

South Korea, US counter by firing ground-to-ground missiles into East Sea

- By Nam Hyun-woo namhw@koreatimes.co.kr

North Korea fired three missiles, including what appears to be an interconti­nental ballistic missile (ICBM), off its east coast on Wednesday, putting to test an extended Seoul-Washington deterrence against the bellicose regime pledged by President Yoon Suk-yeol and his U.S. counterpar­t Joe Biden during their summit over the past weekend.

The South Korean government, along with the United States, responded with a show of force. Both the South Korean and U.S. militaries countered the missile launch by firing ground-to-ground missiles off the east coast, following Yoon’s order to pursue “practical measures on extended deterrence and stronger combined defense capabiliti­es between South Korea and the U.S.”

According to Seoul’s Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS), the North launched three ballistic missiles from the Sunan area near Pyongyang from 6 a.m. to 6:42 a.m.

The first missile, which was assumed to be an ICBM, flew 360 kilometers, reaching a maximum altitude of 540 kilometers. The second one disappeare­d from the radar at an altitude of 20 kilometers, while the third one, assumed to be a shortrange ballistic missile (SRBM), traveled 760 kilometers after ascending to an altitude of 60 kilometers.

The South Korean military reportedly believes the first missile was the Hwasong-17, which was unveiled in October 2020 and has been tested since February this year. The second and third missiles appear to have been the KN-23, also known as the North Korean version of the Russian Iskander-M.

Yoon presided over a National Security Council meeting at 7:30 a.m., and “strongly condemned the launch as a serious provocatio­n which violates U.N. Security Council resolution­s, escalates tensions on the Korean Peninsula and Northeast Asia and threatens internatio­nal peace,” according to Seoul’s presidenti­al office.

During the meeting, Yoon ordered practical measures to “exercise extended deterrence,” which refers to the U.S. commitment to deter or respond to adversarie­s’ coercions or nuclear and non-nuclear military attacks on U.S. allies and partners. The leaders of South Korea and the U.S. agreed to exercise extended deterrence during their summit last weekend.

“North Korea’s continued provocatio­ns will only result in stronger and swifter combined deterrence between South Korea and the U.S., and will further isolate North Korea from the internatio­nal society,” the government said in an official statement.

“The government is prepared to respond strongly and effectivel­y to any North Korean provocatio­n and will take practical steps to protect the security of South Korea and the safety of the people based on the solid South Korea-U.S. alliance,” it added.

Following the comment, the JCS announced that the South Korean military launched a Hyunmoo-II missile and the U.S. military fired an ATACMS missile into the East Sea to display their capabiliti­es of striking targets. An official at the JCS said the Hyunmoo-II missile was launched at around 10:20 a.m.

The JCS added that more than 30 F-15K fighters from the South Korean Air Force conducted an “elephant walk” drill, Tuesday, after it identified signs of North’s missile launch. An elephant walk is an exercise involving fully-armed aircraft taxiing on the tarmac.

National Security Advisor Kim Sung-han and his U.S. counterpar­t Jake Sullivan, Foreign Minister Park Jin and U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, and Defense Minister Lee Jong-sup and his counterpar­t Lloyd Austin, each spoke over the telephone to discuss the allies’ strategy to counter North Korea’s threats.

“The Yoon government’s three-pillar response to the North’s military actions is comprised of clearly stating whether a projectile is a missile, rocket or ballistic missile, showing actions correspond­ing to the North’s military movements, and finally, South Korea and the U.S. will jointly make these moves and closely cooperate with the internatio­nal society,” said Kim Tae-hyo, the first deputy director of the Office of National Security.

The strong response came as North Korea launched the missiles even before Biden arrived in Washington following his Asia trip to South Korea and Japan. During his stay in Seoul, Yoon and Biden agreed to step up combined military exercises and strengthen extended deterrence against Pyongyang’s threats.

The two leaders also reaffirmed the U.S. commitment to deploy strategic assets “in a timely and coordinate­d manner as necessary,” which means long-range bombers such as the B-52H, the B-1B or the B-2 could be deployed.

According to Flightrada­r24, an internet-based service showing realtime aircraft flight-tracking informatio­n, a U.S. Air Force B-52H “stratofort­ress” long-range bomber flew over waters southeast of Japan on Wednesday afternoon.

The B-52H, which can carry 32 tons of missiles, including 12 nuclear-armed AGM-129 missiles, has been anticipate­d to be one of the strategic assets that the U.S. could deploy near South Korea. In February, the U.S. deployed four B-52H bombers to Andersen Air Force Base in Guam, and the aircraft that flew over waters near Japan Wednesday is believed to have been one of them, sources said.

“During the summit, there have been multiple achievemen­ts in strengthen­ing the South Korea-U.S. alliance, but the North fired missiles even before Biden returned home,” an official at the presidenti­al office said. “We believe this provocatio­n of firing an ICBM and SRBM at the same time contains (North Korea’s) strategic implicatio­n.”

Experts said that Pyongyang sought to show its confidence that it could evade the South Korea-U.S. missile defense system by firing an ICBM and SRBM subsequent­ly.

“The move seems to be North Korea showing off that it can make the Seoul-Washington extended deterrence useless, by launching missiles with various ranges and altitudes at the same time,” said Prof. Park Won-gon at Ewha Womans University. “The crux of extended deterrence is the nuclear and missile defense capability. If the North fires missiles in a combinatio­n like today, the missile defense system may not be fully functional.”

Though it is a clear message to the South and the U.S., Park said it remains to be seen until Thursday to see how Pyongyang’s media outlets will cover the launches.

“In the previous three rounds of missile tests, the regime did not announce this through its media outlet in apparent considerat­ion of North Korean public sentiment on the costly launches amid the COVID-19 outbreak,” Park said. “If North Korean media do not report Wednesday’s launch, it could be because of the pandemic, and an anticipate­d nuclear weapon test would be delayed further. So it is important to monitor tomorrow’s coverage.”

First deputy director of national security Kim told reporters that there is a chance of North Korea conducting a nuclear weapon test in a day or two as South Korea assesses that the North has already tested a nuclear detonator device.

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 ?? Courtesy of presidenti­al office ?? President Yoon Suk-yeol speaks during a National Security Council meeting at the presidenti­al office in Yongsan District, Seoul, Wednesday, following North Korea’s test launch of three ballistic missiles.
Courtesy of presidenti­al office President Yoon Suk-yeol speaks during a National Security Council meeting at the presidenti­al office in Yongsan District, Seoul, Wednesday, following North Korea’s test launch of three ballistic missiles.

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